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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The poor spatial resolution of positron emission tomography (PET) is a limiting factor in the accurate assay of physiological processes investigated by compartmental modeling of tracer uptake and metabolism in living human brain. The radioactivity concentration in a region-of-interest is consequently altered by loss of signal from that structure and contamination from adjacent brain regions, phenomena known as partial volume effects. We now apply an
MRI
-based algorithm to compensate for partial volume effects in the special case of compartmental modeling of the cerebral uptake of 6-[(18)F]fluoro-L-dopa (FDOPA), an exogenous substrate of dopa decarboxylase. High-resolution
MRI
scans were obtained from normal volunteers (n = 4) and patients with
Parkinson's disease
(n = 4) in order to segment specific brain regions and calculate the partial volume correction factors. Dynamic 2D PET scans were acquired during 90 min following intravenous infusion of FDOPA. After partial volume correction, the apparent net blood-brain clearance of FDOPA (K(i)) was greatly increased in caudate and putamen of normal subjects and in caudate of
Parkinson's disease
patients. The equilibrium distribution volume of FDOPA (V(D)(e)) in cerebral cortex increased by 35% in all subjects. Using a two-compartment model, the relative activity of dopa decarboxylase with respect to FDOPA (k(D)(3)) in the basal ganglia was increased 2-3 times in normal subjects, to the range obtained previously in brain of living rat. The partial volume correction also increased the magnitude of k(D)(3) in caudate of
Parkinson's disease
patients, but did not alter k(D)(3) in putamen. A three-compartment model correcting for elimination of decarboxylated metabolites also yielded higher estimates of k(D)(3), but with a penalty in precision of the estimates. Together, these observations suggest that the limited spatial resolution of PET results in substantial underestimation of the true rate of FDOPA uptake and metabolism in vivo, and may also tend to obscure regional heterogeneity in the neurochemical pathology of
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Effect of partial volume correction on estimates of the influx and cerebral metabolism of 6-[(18)F]fluoro-L-dopa studied with PET in normal control and Parkinson's disease subjects. 1088 Oct 28
Previous reports have provided evidence of a reticulo-thalamic system, extending from the mesencephalic reticular formation (MRF) to the ventrolateral thalamus (VL), involved in the production of tremor. In humans, a funnel of fibers in the posterior subthalamus named the prelemniscal radiations (Raprl) has been described as an exquisite target to treat tremor in cases of
Parkinson's disease
. In the present study, a group of 14 patients suffering from
Parkinson's disease
, with prominent unilateral tremor and rigidity, were implanted with tetrapolar depth brain stimulation (DBS) electrodes in Raprl to perform chronic electrical stimulation (ES) for the treatment of patient symptoms. Electrodes were left externalized to corroborate their placement throughout
MRI
studies and also to perform the following electrophysiological battery: (a) recording of somatosensory-evoked responses (SEP) through different electrode contacts and scalp by means of a paradigm to study the attention process; (b) evoking scalp EEG responses by stimulation with low (3 cps, 6 cps) and high (60-120 cps) frequencies with stimuli delivered through different electrode contacts, and (c) studying recovery cycle (RC) potentials in the Raprl while the upper MRF was being stimulated and, conversely, the RC in MRF while Raprl was being stimulated, before and after subacute Raprl stimulation. Thereafter, the electrodes were internalized and connected to a pulse generator (IPG) to carry on chronic ES, while the effects of stimulation were determined through a quantitative evaluation that measured phasic and tonic muscular activity with EMG recordings during different motor tasks. Results indicate the following: (a) that late, but not early, SEP components were recorded in Raprl and modulated in different attentive conditions; (b) that bilateral recruiting responses and spike and wave complexes were elicited by Raprl through low-frequency stimulation, while bilateral positive DC shifts induced by high-frequency stimulation were recorded, similar to those obtained in animals from MRF, and (c) that Raprl-ES induced RC inhibition at Raprl, but Raprl ES did not change MRF-RC. Long-term Raprl-ES induced a significant decrease in tremor and rigidity. It was concluded that Raprl represents a subthalamic circuit electrophysiologically related to MRF in the genesis of tremor and rigidity and in the process of selective attention. Raprl-ES induced a significant improvement in tremor and rigidity by causing inhibition of the stimulated area.
...
PMID:Subthalamic prelemniscal radiation stimulation for the treatment of Parkinson's disease: electrophysiological characterization of the area. 1103 78
Deep brain stimulation by high frequency (HFS) has been developed starting in the thalamic target (Vim) from pragmatic observations and subsequently followed by other targets, such as the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and pallidum as an application of current knowledge from basic preclinical research in neuroscience. The mechanism involved by this neurosurgical approach is not completely solved. For Vim we have formed the hypothesis that HFS induces a jamming of sensory-motor loops but for the STN, from our experimental research in rats we have shown that HFS induces functional inhibition of cell activity in the target nuclei. In our patients the implantation of the stimulation electrodes was carried out stereotactically, under local anesthesia, using ventriculography,
MRI
, microrecordings and clinical evaluation of the effects of stimulation on rigidity. When the stimulation is turned ON in the STN area a significant decrease in rigidity was determined by the neurologists. Stimulation or even penetration of the electrode may be responsible for transient dyskinesias. The average location of the clinically efficient contact of the chronic stimulating electrodes is statistically located at 5.02 +/- 0.71 1/12 degrees of AC-PC in the AP direction, at -1.5 +/- 0.66 1/8 degrees of the height of the thalamus in the ventricle direction, with laterality at 11.98 +/- 1.12 mm in the lateral direction. The beneficial effects of STN stimulation are significant providing that the electrodes are correctly placed into the target. There is strong improvement of the symptoms of the triad in which akinesia, rigidity, and tremor are reduced on average to 41. 6, 48.6, and 27%, respectively, when compared with the previous preoperative level. From our experience, HFS of the STN could be considered the surgical therapy of choice at advanced stages of
Parkinson's disease
.
...
PMID:Subthalamic stimulation for Parkinson's disease. 1103 79
This review article deals with the cardinal features to differentiate various conditions which present with parkinsonism, other than
Parkinson's disease
, Lewy body disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration. Special attention is paid to the distinctive clinical features, laboratory data and neuroimaging findings of frequent diseases as well as important ones including multiple system atrophies(MSA), drug-induced parkinsonism, vascular pseudo-parkinsonism and manganese intoxication due to parenteral nutrition.
MRI
is useful to diagnose MSA, vascular pseudo-parkinsonism and manganese intoxication. Benzamide derivatives including sulpiride, tiapride, metoclopramide and cisapride are the main causes of drug-induced parkinsonism in recent years in Japan.
...
PMID:[Essential points to differentiate various diseases causing parkinsonism]. 1106 45
Iron content of the basal ganglia was investigated in 25 patients with idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
and 14 matched healthy control subjects using a partially refocused interleaved multiple echo sequence on a 1.5 Tesla
MRI
system. R(2)* (1/T(2)*) and R(2)' (1/T(2)') relaxation rates were higher in the substantia nigra of patients with
Parkinson's disease
, which indicates that iron content is elevated in this region. R(2)' was lower in the putamen, indicating reduced iron levels; reduction in this region was positively correlated with disease duration. Iron-related oxidative stress may contribute to the neurodegeneration of
Parkinson's disease
, which may lead to alterations in the iron levels of the striatum. We describe a simple, non-invasive technique for measuring iron content.
...
PMID:Brain iron deposition in Parkinson's disease imaged using the PRIME magnetic resonance sequence. 1109 45
In stereotactic pallidotomy for
Parkinson's disease
, care must be taken to avoid internal capsule injury while maximizing improvement of rigidity and tremor. In 21 patients, intraoperative electromyography (EMG) was used to assess stimulation thresholds required for capsular responses and to monitor muscle tone and tremor. Surface EMG electrodes were placed on the face and multiple muscle groups of the extremities. The stimulation and lesion electrode was introduced via
MRI
-guided stereotaxis toward a point 2-3 mm anterior to the midcommissural point, 5-6 mm inferior to the AC-PC plane, and 21-22 mm lateral to the midline. Exact targets were modified according to
MRI
-visualized anatomy. With stimulation at 5 and 50 Hz, thresholds for detection of EMG responses were usually seen at 4-5 mA. EMG responses were consistently seen prior to visual observation of muscle activity. Timing of EMG response relative to stimulus aided in differentiating stimulus-related movement from spontaneous tremor. Resting spontaneous EMG activity was seen to decrease as rigidity was improved by incremental lesion production. EMG activity related to tremor was recorded; tremor decrease by lesion production was documented by EMG recording. Patient cooperation with physiologic testing during stimulation and lesion production may become limited. Intraoperative EMG monitoring provides an adjunct to improve reliability of assessment of capsular stimulation and rigidity while providing documentation of lesion impact on rigidity and tremor.
...
PMID:Electromyography during stereotactic pallidotomy for Parkinson's disease. 1112 61
The revitalization of surgery for
Parkinson's disease
(PD) has fueled discussion about the best methodology to define the target. Placement of electrodes for deep brain stimulation (DBS) requires the usual stereotactic technique but the argument is mainly centered on whether or not microrecording neuronal activity is necessary. We compared the accuracy of calculating the coordinates X (medio-lateral) and Y (rostro-caudal) considered by the classic stereotactic method, i.e., definition of the AC-PC intercomissural line by
MRI
and a digitized version of the Schaltenbrand's atlas, with final electrode placement according with microrecording and microstimulation in 21 patients. For both the globus pallidum internum (GPi) (n = 21) and the subthalamic nucleus (STN) (n = 36) there was, respectively, a 43% and 45% mismatching of more than 3 mm between the theoretic coordinates and the final site of electrode location. This applies to both the X and Y planes. Accuracy was not improved in patients (n = 11) in whom the bilateral procedure was undertaken in a single day. We conclude that proper electrode positioning of the STN and GPi requires fine electrophysiologic assessment.
...
PMID:Targeting the basal ganglia for deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease. 1118 71
Neoplasm is an uncommon cause of a parkinsonian syndrome. We report a woman with primary brain B-cell lymphoma presenting as
Parkinson's disease
. After 1 year of the illness, CT and
MRI
showed lesions without mass effect in the basal ganglia and corpus callosum. The patient did not respond to levodopa and right cerebellar and brain-stem signs appeared, which prompted further neuroimaging, showing an increase in size of the lesions and a right cerebellar and pontine mass. Stereotactic biopsy of the basal ganglia showed high-grade B-cell lymphoma. Despite the basal ganglia frequently being involved in lymphoma of the brain, presentation with typical or atypical parkinsonism is exceptional.
...
PMID:Primary brain lymphoma presenting as Parkinson's disease. 1121 45
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), the second most frequent cause of primary degenerative dementias following Alzheimer's disease, has been increasingly recognized since the proposal of the consensus name and clinical diagnostic criteria. Although DLB overlaps in clinical, pathological, and genetic features with Alzheimer's disease and
Parkinson's disease
, DLB should be understood as an entity with the essential feature of the presence of Lewy bodies in the brain stem and cerebral cortex. From the clinical point of view, DLB is characterized by the presence of progressive dementia without severe memory disorders at the early stage, with significant cognitive fluctuations, well-formed recurrent visual hallucinations, and spontaneous Parkinsonism. This article reviews recent clinical and research findings, including our own, to facilitate clinical recognition of DLB. In addition to the supportive features described in the consortium clinical diagnostic criteria for DLB such as falls and great sensitivity to neuroleptic drugs, our studies found other frequent disorders including disproportionately severe visuoconstructive and visuoperceptual disturbances, transitory alterations in consciousness with reduplication phenomena, misidentification delusions, and non-aphasic misnamings. Neuroimaging features include relatively preserved hippocampal volume on
MRI
and occipital involvement on metabolic and blood flow imagings. The correct diagnosis of DLB is important to administer adequate treatment, to avoid adverse effects with neuroleptic drugs, and to establish precise prognosis. The present summary of the clinical features is hopefully helpful for clinical diagnosis of DLB. From a therapeutic point of view, cholinesterase inhibitors seemingly show some efficacy in the treatment of cognitive alterations. Further research would result in advances in diagnostic methods and therapeutic approaches in the near future.
...
PMID:[Dementia with Lewy bodies]. 1121 12
Transcranial sonography is a new diagnostic tool, allowing not only the evaluation of cerebral arteries but also the two-dimensional display of the brain parenchyma. In this review we will summarize basics of the application, the ultrasound anatomy of the brain and sonographic findings in some movement disorders. While in normal adults basal ganglia nuclei are hypoechogenic, they are hyperechogenic in certain basal ganglia disorders. In
Parkinson's disease
, for example, the substantia nigra can be depicted as a distinctly echogenic area. An elevated echogenicity of the lentiform nuclei was noticed in patients with primary adult-onset dystonia. In both disorders the altered echogenicity may arise from higher heavy metal tissue content (i.e. iron in
Parkinson's disease
and copper in primary dystonia). Our findings converge to the hypothesis that transcranial ultrasound sensitively detects pathological metal accumulation not identified by other neuroimaging techniques (CT and
MRI
) and therefore provides new insights in the diagnosis of basal ganglia disorders. The implications of these findings for the understanding of the pathogenesis and its usefulness for the early diagnosis of movement disorders are outlined.
...
PMID:Neuroimaging in basal ganglia disorders: perspectives for transcranial ultrasound. 1121 89
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